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Notebooks Replace Textbooks in Texas

DrEnter writes "Yahoo! is running this article about an experiment at Johnson Elementary school in Dallas, Texas, which will provide an IBM ThinkPad to every 5th and 6th grader, each one loaded with electronic versions of textbooks and 2,000 other books. Apparently, due to rapidly increasing enrollment and long delays to get new books the school is trying to head off future problems. They also mention a similar program in Henrico County, Virginia, using iBooks and how some of these programs are affecting laptop design (like Apple replacing pop-out CD trays with CD slides)."

30 of 371 comments (clear)

  1. I fear the criminal element getting word of this by The+I+Shing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know, these programs to give elementary school students notebook computers sound really great on paper. They sound progressive, tech-savvy, and even hip, but I have grave doubts about it.

    What bothers me is that there are a few dangerous criminals out there who read newspapers, and I imagine that upbeat stories about ten- and eleven-year-old kids walking up and down the street to and from school with $1350 notebook computers in the their backpacks are likely to give a handful of enterprising criminals some unpleasant ideas.

    I picture a dozen or so kids blissfully strolling home from school when a dirty white van pulls up. Two guys with masks on pop out of the back of the van, point guns at the kids, demand that all backpacks be removed and placed on the ground, load a dozen backpacks into the van and drive straight to their favorite crooked pawn shop.

    If a school system is going to provide notebook computers for its young students, or require them to own their own, I think it would be wise of them to keep quiet about it.

    So far a bunch of school systems have implemented such plans without any reported dramatic increase in students getting robbed, but I fear that once the word gets out among an areas criminals that there's easy pickings walking around wearing backpacks, all heck could break loose.

    --
    You are in error. No-one is screaming. Thank you for your cooperation.
  2. Ebook Reader Needed by l810c · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I've tried reading ebooks on a laptop and it's just plain uncomfortable for any long duration. I haven't been to cost justify one yet, but a tablet pc might be better. There is also the added distractions of checking email, IM'ing and *shhh* playing a quick game of sol.

    While I don't think it is bad idea to supply all students with laptops, I think this is a perfect opportunity for a next generation ebook reader. I have an Ebookman that is ok for reading text, but doesn't handle PDF's or graphics, has a small screen and eats batteries when backlit.

    There are several products from asia that are interesting, I just wish they would make it here sooner:

    EB660
    Panasonic Sigmabook
    Sony

    This could be the type of application that would launch ebooks into the mainstream.

  3. Everything's bigger in Texas by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Funny

    Outfit them all with giant sewing-machine size Compaq luggables for portable computers. Everything's bigger in Texas, so why not have the biggest portable computers around? The former governor also told me that the bigger a disk is, the more data it holds too!

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    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  4. 9 seconds by nevek · · Score: 5, Funny

    Amount of time It takes for every thinkpad to be running counterstrike.

    Billy, what is 8 divided by 2?

    What? Man that was BS Stupid Shield Lamers, Damn Lag. #@$#%

    I'm L337 Screw you Teacher!

  5. Report card time. by AtariAmarok · · Score: 5, Funny
    Hank Hill: "Bobby, why is it you get -1 Troll on your report card when little Khan Jr always gets at least a +3 Insightful every term?"

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  6. This is stupid. by DAldredge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A large portion of the 'graduates' in the Dallas school system can not read or write at the 3rd grade level.

    Couldn't the money be better spent on, I don't know teaching?

    1. Re:This is stupid. by greg_barton · · Score: 5, Interesting

      A large portion of the 'graduates' in the Dallas school system can not read or write at the 3rd grade level.

      I'm a graduate of the Dallas school system and I can read and write just fine. I'd like you to define "large portion" and provide statistics to back up your claim.

      Couldn't your time be better spent on, I don't know, precise and accurate statements?

  7. Re:I fear the criminal element getting word of thi by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Think about your average 5th and 6th grader, not exactly a bastion of common sense. Now, think about handing them a 1350 laptop.

    I can only imagine that with in the first day they had 10 kids in the principles office with smashed screens, click-o-death harddrives, etc.

    --
    Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
  8. e-books suck by UncleBiggims · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The MBA program I attended used electronic versions of books a lot. I hated it. A lot of times I wanted to highlight a section or makes notes in the margin. You just can't do this without a real book. Some people printed theirs out. The cost of doing this is ridiculous versus just buying the book in the first place.

  9. I am in the library by spiritraveller · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I am supposed to be studying.

    Instead, I am replying to a slashdot article on my laptop.

    You see, my school is very tech-savvy. The reading carousels have ethernet ports.

    I am easily distracted by the computer, and I'm a grad student! I hope these 5th and 6th graders have a lot of discipline... ha!

  10. Not enough money for upgrades now by plcurechax · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So rather than the chronic complains from school boards of not enough money for textbooks for every students, are we going to hear of complaints of not enough money to keep the computers up-to-date with software updates, security fixes, current eBook readers, and current editions of various eBooks.

    Let alone the burden of replacement cost for a below poverty line family when a child has his/her laptop stolen.

  11. Re:I fear the criminal element getting word of thi by Pxtl · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Amen. Give the kids a cheap external hard disk to take to class with textbooks and suchlike on that, then make a deal with a wholesale refurbisher for home and classroom desktops. The hard disk would be much less valuable if stolen.

  12. We have a statewide program like this by PunkerTFC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here in Maine every 7th grader is provided with a 12" iBook. Some people think the program is very successful, others think it's a huge waste of money. As one of the students who didn't get a laptop (senior this year) I'm a little jealous, but I think it's a good idea.

  13. I agree with this post. by Fecal+Troll+Matter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Another thought:

    Are the teachers able to use and understand these machines?

    1. Re:I agree with this post. by scooby111 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, how I wish I had mod points to mod the parent up for this.

      I do tech support for 3 different school districts. In my experience, the biggest problem is that teachers rarely have the computer knowledge to use utilize any new technology. Of the 150 or so teachers, perhaps 4 or 5 understand what a network is. Perhaps 2 of those would be able to leverage the new technology into something beneficial for the children.

      Why spend $1300+ for a new laptop for each child when you're only going to use it as a glorified e-book? Sure they are capable of much more, but does an elementary school have the resources and support necessary to utilize them?

      We get technology grants all the time. It seems that the money for new technology is there, but it is never accompanied by the training money or staffing dollars to implement it. The school is expected to pay for that. How does a school that barely has enough money to pay their teachers come up with money to pay the technical support for that many laptops.

  14. Paper? by alexatrit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What ever happened to the old methods of teaching? Proper instruction by example? Reading the assignments out of the book? I still think there's something to be said for turning the pages yourself and reading, away from the electronics. In addition, laptops for kids will further introduce repetitive stress injuries and carpal tunnel syndrom earlier in people's lives.

    --

    Nothing but the finest in meaningless drivel
  15. Re:kinda stupid by RetroGeek · · Score: 4, Funny

    how about learning to write with pen and paper.
    what happens when the damn piece of crap breaks down?


    You, um, sharpen the pencil?

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    - - - - - - - - - - -
    I am a programmer. I am paid to produce syntax not grammar. Deal with it.
  16. Cost Effectiveness by the+sabster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The article said a set of books costs $350/student, and they thought they could get a laptop for $500/student.

    We all know laptops become antiquated within a few years. I find it highly unlikely that a laptop would last for 5 years, it's probable that at the 3-4 mark the school district would have to sink big $ into new software licenses, or just buy new machines.

    I'm pretty sure I remember some of my school textbooks being pretty darn old... the signatures & dates of students being assigned to them were 10+ years on some books.

    So how is buying laptops w/ ebooks saving any money?

  17. Accidents happen by Pi_0's+don't+shower · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As a former HS teacher, I remember "book return day" at the end of the year. Ugh. Do you know how many kids wanted to pay $60 to replace the physics textbook they lost or damaged so badly it was unusable?

    Now, what happens when instead of $60, a lost or stolen COMPUTER costs 25 times that to replace? I sense that the parents may not be so happy with this arrangement, either.

    Keep the computers in the schools, I say. Give the kids books to take home.

    1. Re:Accidents happen by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Funny

      answer - toshiba toughbooks.

      they can withstand even a 8 year old boy.

      I have an old one that has been sitting open and running on my deck all winter long. still works good, the keyboard was funky until I got the pine needles out of it.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:Accidents happen by Paulrothrock · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even better idea: Make a $99 Book reader and give that to the kids.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    3. Re:Accidents happen by Slack3r78 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Except now you're talking in the range of $4k/unit. I love Panasonic's notebooks as they're near impossible to kill, but money is one thing not readily available in education.

  18. Textbooks, any way you like 'em by Uninvited+Guest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know, it seems that every school board wants a set a of textbooks that match their own criteria. Some school systems want creationism taught alongside evolution; other systems want phonics emphasized over rote spelling. With paper textbooks, no publisher can produce a textbook that pleases every set of criteria. At best, the publishers can come up with variants on the original textbook, and update the next edition to suit a plurality of customers.

    Enter electronic textbooks. Publishers can now produce a unique version of any textbook for any given school system. What's more, the content is no longer static for years and years. Found a typo in that edition? We'll have that corrected and downloaded to you in a week. A major change in biology studies because of human genome research? No problem. Examples, homework assignments, and content need only be limited by how much the publisher can organize and layout. School systems' per-student textbook costs drop down to the cost of a computer per student (which follows them through high school or 'till they break it) and the publisher subscription costs.

    Sure, there are problems with textbooks on a tablet computer. However, the cost and content benefits are so strong, school systems will be forced to switch. The bag full of books we lugged to and from school (through the snow) (uphill) (both ways) will become the old-fogey gag of our children.

    --
    Sometimes I worry that I'll develop Alzheimer's disease, but no one will notice.
  19. Re:I fear the criminal element getting word of thi by timmi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Havong worked for a company that both resold, and serviced notebook computers sold to 5th and 6th graders in Michigan, I can say that while there did seem to be a higher percentage of notebooks deployed to students coming back, (as opposed to ones issued to teachers,) but I can't be sure, I have no hard numbers on total deployment.

    Out of somewhere on the order of 2000-3000 notebooks sold, we would usually have only a couple come in every day, and maybe once a week one that was a non warranty repair.

    The package we sold, included a 3-year extended warranty with once-per-year for so called "End-User Abuse" repairs.

    I think a lot has to do with the design of the notebooks.

    I think the mode we handed out in '01 was much better than the one in '02, which had screws that secured the screen's plastic back to the hinges, that should have been installed with Loc-tite [SP? I've never had to use the stuff, really.] because they were working their way loose, causing loose displays, that would wiggle before the hinge started moving, occasionally causing damage to the plastic housing of the display.

    I think from a durability standpoint, the notebooks design and weight matters more than anything else. Apple style slot load drives would have been a big improvement.

    As I recall, the children were regularly told to back their work up to the network, (though not all of them did it) because if they ever had a problem, the first thing that they always did was re-image it to rule out any software problems, (and because the Mfr. would only pay us for working them if a part had actually failed.)

    In the case of the program I worked for, the parents purchased and owned the laptops, (financial aid was availible,) and there were two "Special" notebooks, for visually impaired students, (one purchased by the district, one by the parents)

    In summary I think the success or failure of such an inititive depends on the specific implimentation.

  20. Nice, but... by gillbates · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Great! So instead of printing a copy of the classics downloaded from the internet at a few pennies per copy, my child can now use a $1350 laptop:

    • Bullies might not care for Johnny's printouts of Wuthering Heights, but they'd be glad to take his laptop.
    • Instead of paying $50 per child per year for textbook rental, parents will now have to pay $50 per year per laptop for antivirus subscriptions, and buy a ~$1000 laptop for each of their children.
    • Lost laptops are a much bigger problem than lost books.
    • How many kids hawk their textbooks for drug money? How many kids would hawk their laptop for drug money?

    I don't see any sense in this at all. Basically, this makes every child a target of criminal activity. But worse, it seems to me that this is a part of the greater "worship computers because they are the future..." mantra I see in schools. Just because little Johnny can use a computer doesn't mean he's not an idiot, and I believe that most businesses are aware of this fact. What's going to happen is that these parents are going to find out the hard way that the money they spent on computer hardware is actually going to be a disadvantage when it comes to their children going to college - you can't use a computer on standardized tests, and without it, little Johnny's going to be lost. No worry, though - he can still qualify for that fast food job and go to a "computer school," or community college where he'll learn how to be a Windows Admin for $6/hour (or whatever it pays by then). If he looks good, they might feature him in the commercials...

    Rest assured, these students won't learn any computer science during this program. In fact, they'll be lucky to read even 10% of the books installed...

    Computers don't teach logic or reason - if they did, a substantial portion of the population would not be making a living teaching inherently stupid machines to perform monotonous tasks.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  21. Try a google search. by DAldredge · · Score: 4, Informative

    Try searching google.

    DISD could make grade promotion easier

    Plan proposed to help overage students

    02/24/2000

    By Linda K. Wertheimer / The Dallas Morning News

    The young man with the mustache slouches in the desk chair, grinning disarmingly at teacher Theda Redwine.

    Juan Garcia / DMN
    David Saucedo, 16, is an eighth-grader at Quintanilla Middle School. He says the thought of getting a second chance to advance to ninth grade gives him hope.

    Ms. Redwine, who tutors David Saucedo, doesn't smile back. David is a 16-year-old in the eighth grade at Quintanilla Middle School. He already has flunked two grades. He's barely passing now and is insisting that he has no homework to do.

    David is two years older than the average eighth-grader in the Dallas Independent School District. Overage students like him are the motivation for a proposed policy school board members will vote on Thursday.

    If the proposal passes, more than 1,700 seventh- and eighth-graders who automatically would have been held back in the past will get a chance to advance - if they make up course work in summer school.

    Last year, students who failed three of their four core subjects - English, math, science and social studies - in middle school were held back, whether they went to summer school or not.

    But if the school board approves the proposal, those students could be promoted as long as they pass two subjects in summer school.

    With the proposal, Dallas is tackling a national issue: how to get rid of so-called "social promotions" but keep schools from filling with overage students.

    In a district in which almost half of all middle-school students failed at least one core subject last year, the balance is a delicate one.

    School district officials who worked with middle school principals on the proposal said the main goal is to get overage students out of middle school and into high school.

    This school year, 22 percent of Dallas eighth-graders are 15 to 17 years old - the ages at which most of their peers are in ninth through 11th grades. In at least a few cases, 17-year-olds are attending class with 12-year-olds.

    "These kids in middle school who are overaged, they get discouraged," said Dr. Donna Bearden , assistant superintendent of curriculum. "If we get them into high school, we have a better chance of getting them to stay in school."

    Not reaching everybody

    Even if trustees approve the policy, it won't reach all of the students who fail, based on last year's statistics. Last summer, only 46 percent of students who failed a grade went to summer school to try to earn promotion.

    "It's by no means solving the problem," Dr. Bearden said.

    Most states, including Texas, have instituted bans against social promotion in various grades, coupling new laws with summer school as the last chance for students.

    Urban districts in particular have been hunting for ways to comply with new laws and help many failing students, said Dr. Gerald Tirozzi , executive director of the National Association of Secondary Principals in Reston, Va.

    Studies have shown that when students are held back a year and returned to the same teachers, they often fail again, said Dr. Tirozzi, a former assistant secretary in the U.S. Department of Education.

    "What Dallas is doing is a good idea," he said. "It's sending kids a message: If you don't master these subjects, we won't send you on to high school."

    Dallas principals and teachers had mixed reactions about the proposal. Some fear that students who are already failing two courses will give up on a third, figuring they have to go to summer school anyway. Others say middle schools can't handle all of the overage students.

    Tom Kelchner , principal at Marsh Middle School in North Dallas, said the proposal amounts to "loosening the promotion policy." He said the solution lies within middle schools, which can provide tutoring and create special programs fo

  22. Re:I fear the criminal element getting word of thi by OglinTatas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes. Only instead of cheap external hard drives, give the kids CD-R's with the textbooks on them, refurbished PC's for home if they need one, and let them do their homework on paper. A lost CD-R is 10 cents.
    The text book publishers may not like that idea, but maybe they can change their copyright policy from a $60 per textbook model to a $60 per student license, and let the schools replace the CD-Rs as needed.
    Use the money for the laptops to build a decent computer lab for the students instead.

  23. Books too Heavy, Laptops to Expensive by BadlandZ · · Score: 5, Interesting
    As a former HS teacher, I remember "book return day" at the end of the year. .

    You might want to go back and look at how thick the books are, and how many books.

    Keep the computers in the schools, I say. Give the kids books to take home. .

    I could not possibly disagree more. Given the ridicules volumes of text books being pushed on children, this is a good alternative.

    Every year, some text book salesman shows some board of teachers how his book has more information, more details, more color glossy pictures, and converts the school to a new book. But the salesman and the teacher don't carry them home on their back, the kids do. Now, some on dollys with wheels because the weight is so high.

    I say don't give them books, or laptops. Give them a little book of DVDs and a couple USB drives to hand in reports. Get rid of ALL that junk they carry.

  24. My little brother had one of these by Pragmatix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He spent a lot of time in class AIMing to other people, and generally not paying attention.

    Also a couple kids at the school managed to download massive amounts of Porn onto their laptops.

  25. ePaper by simpl3x · · Score: 5, Informative

    As a designer of textbooks, I am really interested in the ePaper technologies, such as the Sony Librie. In the near term these programs are experiements, but on the five to ten year term I see these products taking over the market. The teachers editions, which will likely see such products first, are at this point multi-volume 12" square, 600 page books, coming in around ten pounds apiece for 30 some pounds of book for a year. And, they don't cover the material. Imagine being able to tie low frame rate video for professional development, as well as the pupil editions, and typical content in a product of this size!

    The displays, as well as the various power draining components are what drive the cost of a $1000 notebook. eliminate much of this, mass produce it, and you have a great $250 solution for the same cost as the books.

    Here is a review of current tech: (http://www.dottocomu.com/b/archives/002571.html) as well as a link to the Guardian article linked within (http://books.guardian.co.uk/ebooks/story/0,11305, 1200034,00.html).